Definition of Capacitor A capacitor is an element that stores electricity and electrical energy (potential energy). A conductor surrounded by another conductor, or a conductor in which all the electric field lines emitted by one conductor terminate in the other conductor, is called a capacitor.
The company is headquartered in Slovenia (Slovenia) in the capital city of Ljubljana (Ljubljana), the factory is located in Slovenia (Slovenia) in the beautiful city of Semic, ISKRA capacitor business unit has 670 employees, the production of capacitor products in the plant area of 26,000 square meters.
The capacitance of a capacitor is numerically equal to the ratio of the charge on a conducting plate to the voltage between the two plates. The basic unit of capacitance of a capacitor is the farad (F). The letter C is usually used in circuit diagrams to denote a capacitive element.
Two conductors in close proximity to each other with a layer of non-conducting insulating medium sandwiched between them, this constitutes a capacitor. A capacitor stores charge when a voltage is applied between the two extreme plates of the capacitor.